Elizabeth Warren is having a moment. After a week that exposed divisions inside the Democratic Party, Warren’s profile has never been higher, both in and outside the Senate. And even though she may have lost this one battle, she’s focused on the war.
On the outside, major progressive groups like MoveOn.org joined the effort to try to draft Warren to run for president in 2016, and more than 300 alumni of the Obama campaign signed onto a letter urging the senator to run Friday morning. “We believed in an unlikely candidate who no one thought had a chance. We worked for him,” they wrote.
But for Warren, the real payoff is most likely inside the Capitol, where she can leverage the outside pressure and support to strengthen her hand as a leader of the progressive wing of the Democratic party in Congress. And this week, she started to flex that muscle unlike ever before.
When Warren entered the Senate, coming off her high-profile 2012 campaign, she disappointed some fans by laying low and following the standard script of the newly-minted rock star senator. “She started off her time in the Senate ripping off a play from former senator [Hillary] Clinton: Keep your head down, attend all your committee hearings, avoid the national press, read the briefing books,” said Jim Manley, a former top aide to Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. “This is the first time that she’s gone so far.”
Even when Warren had disagreements with the White House or leadership in the past, it was usually on secondary issues or handled quietly. She was one of the last progressive senators to sign on to the opposition to Larry Summers’ nomination for Fed Chairman last year. And she said nothing publicly, informing her old Harvard colleague of her opposition in a private meeting before Summers withdrew himself from contention.
But after the 2014 election — which saw Warren on demand from candidates across the country, even in unfriendly territory for liberal Democrats — the senator returned to Washington with a new vigor and willingness to seize the moment of Democratic uncertainty after a drubbing at the polls to remake the party in her image.
“In chaos, lead,” is a mantra of the Progressive Change Campaign Committee, which has close ties to Warren, and it helps explain her thinking this week.
In her first major public and direct confrontation with the White House after the election, she opposed the president’s number-three pick for the Treasury Department because of his current job at the investment giant Lazard. Critics didn’t understand why Warren was making so much hay over a relatively obscure administration post, but her allies say it was not just about Antonio Weiss, but what he represented. Warren wanted to draw a hard line against filling the government with more Wall Streeters.
She quickly proved she was able to build a coalition beyond the usual suspects, getting a wide range of colleagues to oppose the nomination, from Dick Durbin, the Senate’s number-two Democrat, to conservative West Virginia Democrat Joe Manchin.
That was the backdrop when Democrats began to consider a $1.1 trillion spending bill loaded with measures anathema to progressive Democrats, like a measure that would weaken the Dodd-Frank Wall Street reform law and another that would expand the amount of money rich people could donate to political parties tenfold.
Warren quickly moved to gather opposition to the bill, and not just in the Senate, but in the House as well. Flanked by House members at a press conference, she called on her colleagues in the lower chamber to kill the bill. “A vote for this bill is a vote for future taxpayer bailouts of Wall Street,” Warren said Thursday. “It is time for all of us to stand up and fight.”
Related: Major progressive groups join effort to draft Elizabeth Warren
The vote ultimately didn’t go Warren’s way, passing the House late Thursday night. But almost three times as many Democrats voted against the measure as for it — 139 against to 57 in favor.
And Warren is playing a long game, looking to build a coalition in the Senate and move her party in a certain direction, rather than kill any particular bill or nomination per se. “I think she’s trying to draw a line in the sand as we get ready to have Republicans take over the senate next year,” Manley added.
Her tactics have drawn comparison to Republican Sen. Ted Cruz, who like Warren, led his party’s fight against a government funding bill as a freshman in the Senate.
But neither side is particularly eager to make the connection.
“Maybe this thing could be her coming out party, but she is not yet a force in Washington. She is not single-handedly changing the conversation,” said Dan Holler of Heritage Action, a close Cruz ally in his fight against Obamacare last fall, which ultimately led to a government shutdown.
On the left, fans of Warren and otherwise see real differences. “The comparison is inapt for several reasons,” agreed Ari Rabin-Havt, a former Senate leadership staffer and Media Matters executive who now hosts a liberal talk show on Sirius/XM.









